SynBio (May 2024)
Construction of an Elastin-like Polypeptide Gene in a High Copy Number Plasmid Using a Modified Method of Recursive Directional Ligation
Abstract
Elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) are popular biomaterials due to their reversible, temperature-dependent phase separation and their tunability, which is achievable by evolving procedures in recombinant technology. In particular, recursive direction ligation by plasmid reconstruction (PRe-RDL) is the predominant cloning technique used to generate ELPs of varying lengths. Pre-RDL provides precise control over the number of (VPGXG)n repeat units in an ELP due to the selection of type IIS restriction enzyme (REs) sites in the reconstructed pET expression plasmid, which is a low-to-medium copy number plasmid. While Pre-RDL can be used to seamlessly repeat essentially any gene sequence and overcome limitations of previous cloning practices, we modified the Pre-RDL technique, where a high copy number plasmid (pBluescript II SK(+)—using a new library of type IIS REs) was used instead of a pET plasmid. The modified technique successfully produced a diblock ELP gene of 240 pentapeptide repeats from 30 pentapeptide “monomers” composed of alanine, tyrosine, and leucine X residues. This study found that the large, GC-rich ELP gene compromised plasmid yields in pBluescript II SK(+) and favored higher plasmid yields in the pET19b expression plasmid. Additionally, the BL21 E. coli strain expression consistently provided a higher transformation efficiency and higher plasmid yield than the high cloning efficiency strain TOP10 E. coli. We hypothesize that the plasmid/high GC gene ratio may play a significant role in these observations, and not the total plasmid size or the total plasmid GC content. While expression of the final gene resulted in a diblock ELP with a phase separation temperature of 34.5 °C, future work will need to investigate RDL techniques in additional plasmids to understand the primary driving factors for improving yields of plasmids with large ELP-encoding genes.
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